The Local History Society series of talks from September until March are now listed here in the Events section.

Find more out about seven centuries of floods in the Calder Valley, Top Withins, Thousands visiting Hardcastle Crags in the late 19th century, how the Hippies changed Hebden Bridge in the 1970s, local pharmacies, the evil eye in Mytholmroyd farms, the Norman Conquest of Yorkshire and more.

Hebden Bridge has a long history of involvement in The Cooperative Movement and this was remembered recently when the Mayor, Pat Fraser, unveiled a plaque in the Greenwood Room at the Town Hall. The Greenwood Room had recently been refurbished by the Community Association. Joseph Greenwood, after whom the room is named, was a founder member and long-term manager of the Hebden Bridge Fustian Manufacturing Read more28 June 2017

The Artisan Naturalists

Speaker Rob Trueblood told the History Society about self-taught working men - e.g., handloom weavers, shoemaker and tin worker - who became experts in Botany. These men from Lancashire and Yorkshire would meet, sometimes on ’botanizing’ field trips, and correspond. But what was even more significant was their passion to teach as well as to learn. Read more29 March 2017

Be thankful you can flush.
A tale of the Great Stink!

In the summer of 1858, the city of London came to a standstill. And what brought London to its knees was the stench emanating from the River Thames. The river was literally choking on raw sewage. Speaker Tony Boughton gave a talk about the problems caused by the rapid growth of urban areas in the 19th century.

An exhibition organised by the Hebden Bridge Local History Society aimed to show how those who moved into our area in the 1970s - the locals called them ‘hippies’ - kick-started the cultural renaissance which is today so Hebden Bridge.

The Exhibition ran from Monday, 6 March for 5 weeks at Hebden Bridge Town Hall.

This is no ordinary local history book. It is the first publication for many years to cover aspects of the history of various localities across the South Pennines, rather than focusing on the history of a specific area. Produced by the South Pennine History Group as a memorial volume for the late Alan Petford, a gifted local history lecturer, it presents the results of new research by some of the many people that he inspired. See Publications section for more info and short YouTube video.